Jean Charles de La Faille


Quick Info

Born
1 March 1597
Antwerp, Dutch Republic (now Belgium)
Died
4 November 1652
Barcelona, Spain

Summary
Jan-Karel della Faille or Jean Charles de La Faille was a Flemish Jesuit who was the first to determine the centre of gravity of the sector of a circle.

Biography

Jan-Karel della Faille or Jean-Charles de La Faille was born into a rich aristocratic family of Antwerp traders who were Jesuits. His father was Jean-Charles de La Faille, seigneur de Rymenam, while his mother was Marie van de Wouwere. Charles, the subject of this biography, attended the Jesuit school in Antwerp, joining the Jesuit Order on 12 September 1613. He spent two years at a Jesuit College in Malines before returning to Antwerp. De la Faille became a disciple of Saint-Vincent, whom he met in Antwerp where he was also influenced by François d'Aguilon. In 1620 he went to France taking a theology degree at Dôle and teaching mathematics there. De la Faille taught at the Jesuit College of Louvain from 1626 until 1628 when, after a short stay in Lier, he left for Spain on 23 March 1629 where he was appointed as a professor at the Imperial College in Madrid.

Philip IV had become king of Spain and Portugal in 1621. He led Spain and Portugal to victories up to 1635 but then France declared war and he suffered defeats. De la Faille advised Philip IV on questions of defence and of military engineering during this period. La Faille also taught mathematics and military engineering in Madrid. He began teaching at the Imperial College in 1629 [2]:-
... where he enjoyed a distinguished teaching career. Apart from the courses in the Royal Studies, he gave private lessons in mathematics to various members of the nobility and taught military arts and fortifications to the royal pages. In 1638 Philip IV named della Faille Chief Cosmographer of the Council of the Indies ...
In fact there were 21 royal pages. These young men, according to de la Faille's letters of April 1639, 'enjoyed their classes.'

In 1640 Philip IV suffered the loss of Portugal when it declared its independence. De la Faille helped Philip IV by serving as adviser on fortifications to the Duke of Alba along the Spanish-Portuguese border from 1641 until 1644. He wrote to a colleague in the Spanish Netherlands in 1642 [3]:-
Is it possible to find in Flanders some map of Portugal or Catalonia? I would be very grateful if you would tell me, so that I can have it brought here, because here we know very little about this country. I can see that the maps of Orrelius [made in the 1560s] are highly erroneous on Portugal and its frontiers so I am not surprised that our enemies, with smaller forces, are getting the better of us.
After returning to Madrid after he three years of absence he wrote to a friend [4]:-
... now his Majesty and his ministers are so occupied with these wars. ... and there is such a lack of money here that they cannot even attend to very urgent requests. ... I have found Madrid so changed that I scarcely recognise it: such is the need and poverty of the people. ... It is a shame to have to see things as they are: those persons who were once rich are suffering poverty today, and these wars destroy us. ... I study very little, for these times are not conducive to the quiet contemplation that our studies require.
He was, however, soon given new duties by Philip IV [2]:-
... in 1644 [Philip IV] appointed him preceptor to his illegitimate son Juan José de Austria. Della Faille soon became the prince's trusted advisor, and accompanied him on his military campaigns. The education that Juan José de Austria received from della Faille must have exerted a decisive influence on his interest in modern science, for he subsequently became Maecenas to Spanish scientists, employing as his personal physician such significant figures in Spanish scientific renewal as Juan Bautista Juanini.
Juan José de Austria was the son of Philip IV and the actress Maria Calderón. De la Faille made military expeditions to Naples, Sicily and Catalonia with Juan José de Austria who was given his first military command in 1647 when sent to Naples to attempt to crush an uprising. In 1651 de la Faille accompanied him when he led the Spanish army against the rebellion in Catalonia. The army besieged Barcelona, the capital of the province, and in October 1652 the city surrendered and de la Faille entered the captured city along with the army. He died in the in the city a month later.

De la Faille wrote Theses mechanicae in 1625. He is famed, however, for a work Theoremata de centro gravitatis partium circuli et ellipsis in 1632 in which he was the first to determine the centre of gravity of the sector of a circle. The work was written at the suggestion of Saint-Vincent [2]:-
Della Faille's exposition is rigorously geometrical and Archimedean, and the text was praised by the young Huygens.
Busard describes some of de la Faille's results in this text [1]:-
He proved that the centres of gravity of a sector of a circle, of a regular figure inscribed in it, of a segment of a circle, or of an ellipse lie on the diameter of the figure. These theorems are founded on a postulate from Luca Valerio's De centro gravitatis solidorum (1604). ... La Faille ended his work with four corollaries which revealed his ultimate goal: an examination of the quadrature of the circle.
One of de la Faille's close personal and scientific friends was van Langren. Michael Florentius van Langren (1600-1675) was an engineer and cartographer employed as the Mathematician and Royal Cosmographer to the King of Spain. He determined the longitude by studying the phases of the moon and put his solution forward for the prize offered by Spain for a solution to the longitude problem. De la Faille supported van Langren's solution to the longitude problem but no decision was reached about awarding the prize [2]:-
In della Faille's letters to van Langren one can appreciate the breadth of his scientific interests and the attention and critical spirit with which he followed progress in mathematics, astronomy, geography, cartography, and natural philosophy.
At the request of his family, the Belgian painter Anthony Van Dyck painted de la Faille's portrait. In this famous portrait, de la Faille is in religious habit and is represented with his mathematical instruments such as a compass, a square and a globe.


References (show)

  1. H L L Busard, Biography in Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York 1970-1990).
    See THIS LINK.
  2. M Feingold, Jean-Charles della Faille, in Jesuit Science and the Republic of Letters (MIT Press, 2003), 339-340.
  3. G Parker, Maps and Ministers, in D Buisseret (ed.), Monarchs, Ministers, and Maps : The Emergence of Cartography as a Tool of Government in Early Modern Europe (University of Chicago Press, 1992), 124.
  4. L K Stein, Songs of Mortals, Dialogues of the Gods: Music and Theatre in Seventeenth-century Spain (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1993),
  5. H P van der Speeten, Le R P Jean Charles della Faille, de la Compagnie de Jésus, Collection de Précis Historique 3 (1874), 77-83, 111-117, 132-142, 191-201, 213-219, 241-246.
  6. I Vázquez Paredes, Geometric analysis of design of stones and arches in the architectural treatise of Jean Charles de La Faille (Spanish), Publ. Sec. Mat. Univ. Autònoma Barcelona 20 (1980), 61-64.

Additional Resources (show)

Other websites about Jan-Karel della Faille:

  1. Dictionary of Scientific Biography
  2. The Galileo Project,
  3. Google books

Cross-references (show)


Written by J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
Last Update December 2008